Inside America’s worst toxic waste cover-up

In the weeks after the Deepwater Horizon platform exploded and oil began pouring into the Gulf of Mexico, filmmaker Josh Tickell was in touch with folks back home in Louisiana. The stories they told about the spill were very different from what he was hearing in the mainstream media. So Josh and his wife Rebecca hired a film crew and drove south to find out for themselves what was going on.

It doesn’t feature the poisoned turtles, tar-soaked pelicans, or expanses of black crude that are now familiar images of North America’s biggest oil spill. It focuses instead on BP’s efforts to minimize awareness of the spill’s extent, creating what one gulf resident calls “the worst toxic waste cover-up in America’s history.”

Toxic brew

The Big Fix, 89 minutes, Green Planet Productions.

While an oil company shill was on national news saying that bacteria were eating the oil in the gulf, BP was applying a chemical solution to the problem: the oil dispersant Corexit, which contains a solvent known to be harmful to organisms.

According to The Big Fix, BP began semi-covert application of Corexit in the first days after the spill, continued to apply Corexit in huge amounts for months, and has not been held accountable for the consequences.

Although Corexit breaks oil into small particles invisible to the eye, it doesn’t make it go away, as Gulf residents suffering from exposure tell a federal official at a town hall meeting. By mid-July BP claimed to have stopped using Corexit. But local people could still smell Corexit in the air. They saw vats of the stuff in transit and planes spraying clouds of Corexit, often by night. In one telling scene, shot in September, the Tickells sneak past security to film a BP clean-up crew spraying Corexit on a beach under cover of darkness.

As marine toxicologist Susan Shaw explains,

The mixture of dispersant and oil is much more toxic than either oil alone, or dispersant alone.

When the filmmaker hints that BP is still secretly spraying dispersant, her jaw drops, and she sputters, nearly at a loss for words.

Truthtelling

She’s one of the many sources interviewed in the film—journalists, academics, scientists, fishermen, former government officials, and whistleblowers—who tell the real story of the spill, its aftermath, what BP got away with, and why. Their testimony leads Josh to conclude,

We live in a corrupt system, where a small few put power and profit over the health of humankind and the planet.

That’s a stark statement. But hope is provided by the army of truth-tellers enlisted in this film. They set the record straight and remind us that, when united in action, we have more power than we realize.

Comments

“They set the record straight and remind us that, when united in action, we have more power than we realize.”
Sadly, I do not agree with this statement. Even if we all got together and protested, the ruling elite would just call out their storm troopers to pepperspray and club us into submission. With the militarization of the police forces in North America it seems the rulers are preparing for more of our demonstrations as we get more fed up with their corruption and abuses.